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Antimitotic Treatments for Chemically Assisted Oocyte Enucleation in Nuclear Transfer Procedures

Authors :
Josep Santaló
Gloria Calderón
Nuno Costa-Borges
Elena Ibáñez
Maria-Teresa Paramio
Source :
Cloning and Stem Cells. 11:153-166
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2009.

Abstract

Chemically assisted enucleation has been successfully applied to porcine and bovine oocytes to prepare recipient cytoplasts for nuclear transfer procedures. In this study, the antimitotic drugs demecolcine, nocodazole, and vinblastine were first assessed for their ability to induce the formation of cortical membrane protrusions in mouse, goat, and human oocytes. While only 2% of the treated human oocytes were able to form a protrusion, high rates of protrusion formation were obtained both in mouse (84%) and goat oocytes (92%), once the treatment was optimized for each species. None of the antimitotics applied was superior to the others in terms of protrusion formation, but mouse oocytes treated with vinblastine were unable to restore normal spindle morphology after drug removal and their in vitro development after parthenogenetic activation was severely compromised, rendering this antimitotic useless for chemically assisted enucleation approaches. Aspiration of the protrusions in mouse oocytes treated with demecolcine or nocodazole yielded 90% of successfully enucleated oocytes and allowed the extraction of a smaller amount of cytoplasm than with mechanical enucleation, but both enucleation methods resulted in the depletion of spindle-associated gamma-tubulin from the prepared cytoplasts. Treatment of mouse oocytes with demecolcine or nocodazole had no effect on their in vitro development after parthenogenetic activation, or on their ability to repolymerize a new spindle after the removal of the drug or the reconstruction of the treated cytoplasts with a somatic nucleus. Therefore, demecolcine- and nocodazole-assisted enucleation appears as an efficient alternative to mechanical enucleation, which can simplify nuclear transfer procedures.

Details

ISSN :
15577457 and 15362302
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cloning and Stem Cells
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9f48ec7eb8353c887e23143dd187f9fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/clo.2008.0031